{"id":123547,"date":"2018-03-28T13:00:30","date_gmt":"2018-03-28T17:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=123547"},"modified":"2018-04-02T10:20:21","modified_gmt":"2018-04-02T14:20:21","slug":"ode-to-joy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2018\/03\/28\/ode-to-joy\/","title":{"rendered":"Ode to Joy"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"mceTemp\"><\/div>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/joy-and-dog-in-boat.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-123711\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/joy-and-dog-in-boat.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1000\" height=\"758\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/joy-and-dog-in-boat.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/joy-and-dog-in-boat-300x227.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/03\/joy-and-dog-in-boat-768x582.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Last month, midway through the seven-hour drive between Marfa and Austin, my friends and I sat at a picnic table over burnt winter grass, eating the last of our forty grapefruits and some cold steak whose marbling had turned to candle wax. An old man approached us from some distance, making his way over with difficulty. We waited to be hit up for a handout. He wore suspenders over a neat plaid shirt open to a sunburnt throat, and his eyelids were folded over like dog-eared pages. His white mustache combed the wind, and he called us all ma\u2019am.<\/p>\n<p>He\u2019d seen us wrestling our flapping map and had come to point out the landmarks: the dainty bank with Doric columns and plywood for windows, the old hospital, the old hotel, the old pharmacy. Everything was now something else, or shuttered\u2014it was a hipster-free, pre-Marfa situation, a town dying like a tree dies, from the center out. My friend studied the black-and-yellow business card he gave her. \u201cBee removal! We could have used you when they were gobbling up our avocados.\u201d He looked over our lunch spread. \u201cI guess you could spare them just a little bit.\u201d He spoke so much slower than we did.<\/p>\n<p>It was a faint reproach, but I felt a rush of shame and also excitement. The line actually felt good in the mouth. \u201cI guess you could spare them just a little bit.\u201d We\u2019d assumed he would ask us for something. The yellow jackets had scissored off such tiny chunks. We were huge, lumbering as we swatted them away. A small moment had engulfed the larger one. I recognized this flash of moral vertigo: it\u2019s found in the short stories of Joy Williams.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Williams published her first story at age twenty-two, more than a half century ago. Even her earliest stories from the sixties and seventies are electrifyingly fresh and confident\u2014like a calm evening stroll through goblin gardens. Later ones lose some of the storm-green visionary quality (though the very recent reclaim it), but they gain in humanity and in their keening sense of an eroding natural world. In 2015, Knopf assembled her three previous collections and thirteen new stories as <em>The Visiting Privilege<\/em>. It was, as Ben Marcus wrote in the <em>New York Times Book Review<\/em>, \u201cone of the most fearless, abyss-embracing literary projects our literature has seen.\u201d <em>The Visiting Privilege <\/em>is ceaselessly gripping, confiding and strange, a solace and an unsettling. We should have had it in the glovebox of our car, in case of breakdown.<\/p>\n<p>I came to Williams\u2019s work late. Sharp readers had told me about her for years. Why did I resist? Perhaps it was the camouflage of the anodyne name, which sounded like a writer of greeting cards, not of soul-shaking, lucid dreams of mortality.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cDo you want me to paint your nails or do your hair,\u201d Gwendal asked.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cNo,\u201d Gloria said. She was recalling a bad thought she\u2019d had once, a very bad thought. It had caused no damage, however, as far as she knew.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>There are writers who make you see what they have seen, and then there are writers who make you see what you have seen and missed. Those are the ones that pull you back to them.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhat do you want from a short story?\u201d a journalist once asked Williams. \u2018\u2018To be devastated in some way,\u2019\u2019\u00a0she responded. In \u201cThe Blue Men,\u201d a mother brings a shirt to her son in prison, who is to be executed by lethal injection.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>She had bought the shirt new and then washed it at home several times so it was soft and then she had driven over to that place \u2026 Together, mutely, they had bent their heads over it and stared.\u00a0 They watched the shirt and it seemed to shift and shrink as though to accommodate itself to some ghastly and impossible interstice of time and purpose.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhat a shirt,\u201d her child said.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cGive it back,\u201d May whispered.\u00a0 She was terribly frightened. She had obliged some lunatic sense of decorum, and dread\u2014the dread that lay beyond the fear of death\u2014seized her.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThis is the one, I\u2019m going out in this one,\u201d her child said. He was thin, his hair was grey.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI wasn\u2019t thinking,\u201d May said. \u201cPlease give it back, I can\u2019t think about any of this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI was born to wear this shirt,\u201d her child said.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Willams\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/interviews\/6303\/joy-williams-the-art-of-fiction-no-223-joy-williams\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">interview in <em>The Paris Review<\/em><\/a> mentions a craft lecture in which she had declined to discuss craft. She had talked, instead, of writers \u201cwhose way of touching us is simply by exploding on the lintel of our minds.\u201d Back from Texas, I drank this in. I understood the little detonation the bee wrangler had wrought. \u201cThere\u2019s a word in German,<em>\u00a0<\/em><em>Sehnsucht<\/em>,\u201d Williams tells her interviewer. \u201cNo English equivalent, which is often the case. It means the longing for something that cannot be expressed.\u201d Her stories are all in pursuit of <em>Sehnsucht<\/em>. They find it and frame it.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps Williams is right to dodge talk of craft. I don\u2019t think you could learn to write by studying her; what she pulls off is too risky. Short stories are generally better suited to more contained experiences, ones that don\u2019t knock drama into melodrama without giving it time to right itself again. They can stagger under the burden of death. But Williams has a fondness for offhand fatality, for baroque accident and lingering illness, and her stories haul this gothic cargo with the pragmatism of tugboats. The effect is comforting. We\u2019ll all die, and for this to be funny as well as awful is a kind of benediction. There is an unsmiling slapstick to this, a Buster Keaton hilarity tinged with the sublime.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cI suspect there\u2019s only one thing to know about that other world,\u201d Deke opined. \u201cYou don\u2019t go to it when you\u2019re dead. That other world exists only when you\u2019re in this one.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cYes, that\u2019s right,\u201d Angela said. She took a deep, uncertain breath.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>And then there are the acts of radical narrative compression. From \u201cWinter Chemistry\u201d: \u201cHe didn\u2019t care for women and couldn\u2019t care for men.\u201d Or: \u201cThe two girls sat on the beach eating potato chips, unable to decide if the people were drowning or if they were just having a good time.\u201d (They were drowning.) Her characters have a disarming vulnerability, as if they were caught midblink by a camera; they are resigned, almost detached, in the midst of situations that unravel or dissolve. Dogs are frequent walk-ons, full of good will but with no high expectations of humans\u2014they are courteous and astute but not clowns for our affection. They do not wag their tails.<\/p>\n<p>Reviewers call attention again and again to Williams\u2019s misanthropy. I don\u2019t believe in it; her stories can be achingly generous. What gets called misanthropy could be the quality of openness children have before they learn to distinguish curiosity from disgust. \u201cThe tree was quite lovely and it flourished,\u201d Williams writes in \u201cShorelines.\u201d \u201cIt had been planted over the grease trap of the sink. I am always honest when I can be.\u201d Williams uses the word <em>evil<\/em> often, if not lightly, but malice and anger never sour her sentences.<\/p>\n<p>Do the stories sound depressing? It is not possible for them to be, with such burning intelligence, ambushing laughs, and ecstatic jolts of dialogue. In the title story of <em>The Visiting Privilege<\/em>, one of the patients in a psychiatric hospital sees through a visitor battening discreetly on their anguish.<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\">\u201cI\u2019m passionate, intense and filled with private reverie, and so is my friend,\u201d the girl said, \u201cso don\u2019t slime us like you do.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The caboose on a story often turns out to be an engine pulling it in a new direction. The point of view in \u201cHammer\u201d swings abruptly from the mother we have grown to love (now dying, naturally) to someone we\u2019ve only just met in the last three lines\u2014her nurse, who is angling to ensure a new colleague doesn\u2019t get a permanent job. The death turns Audenesque, becomes something tiny and far away, and is all the more moving for it. The narrator of \u201cDangerous\u201d concludes, \u201cEventually I moved out of the shithole, though I still go to AA. I even stopped drinking. I would say then that all is continuing here. Is it the same way there?\u201d These last lines are also the first direct address to a reader, a lone listener somewhere in the wide, echoing world. These spheres of perception brush against one another like a hand dragging the wrong way across cat fur. Nothing that we experience, says that shivery sensation, is ours alone. Or rather, each person is at the center of their own story and at the periphery of those of others, a fact we remember and forget and remember a thousand times.<\/p>\n<p>Hilary Mantel once gave a talk in which she observed that a short story is a glimpse through a half-open door, \u201cand yet,\u201d and I remember her hand chopping emphatically at the air, \u201ca glimpse is not trivial.\u201d <a href=\"https:\/\/store.theparisreview.org\/products\/the-spring-revel\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Next week<\/a>, Joy Williams will receive <em>The<\/em> <em>Paris Review<\/em>\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2017\/12\/05\/joy-williams-will-receive-2018-hadada-award\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Hadada Award for lifetime achievement<\/a>, named for a bird\u2014Africa\u2019s \u201cleast aquatic ibis\u201d (description courtesy of the Oregon Zoo)\u2014which might please her; birds appear nearly as often as dogs in her stories. She will almost certainly wear black prescription sunglasses, as she does night and day, indoors and out. So here she\u2019ll be, in this big city of New York where she appears so seldom. I don\u2019t want to meet her. Well, that\u2019s a lie. I do want to, badly, and yet she\u2019s given me everything I could possibly ask for in her stories. I wonder if those who look at others so well want to be looked at themselves.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><i>Courtney Hodell is a book editor and the director of writers\u2019 programs at the Whiting Foundation.<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Last month, midway through the seven-hour drive between Marfa and Austin, my friends and I sat at a picnic table over burnt winter grass, eating the last of our forty grapefruits and some cold steak whose marbling had turned to candle wax. An old man approached us from some distance, making his way over with [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1447,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[33490],"tags":[11029,6921,7647,2122,9682,2153,7285,1240,4540,33521,7845,1525,33523,32057,33522],"class_list":["post-123547","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-celebrating-joy-williams","tag-99-stories-of-god","tag-austin","tag-ben-marcus","tag-hadada","tag-hadada-award","tag-hilary-mantel","tag-joy-williams","tag-knopf","tag-marfa","tag-paris-review-revel","tag-short-stories","tag-spring-revel","tag-taking-care","tag-the-visiting-privilege","tag-winter-chemistry"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Ode to Joy<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"I came to Joy Williams\u2019s work late. 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